Sunday, June 27, 2021

An Abundant Life - Sea And Stars

 I wrote about the Artist and Sailor Reid Stowe in 2019 when he had a show in Chelsea that I had helped do publicity for along with the opening night party and VIP event. As I wrote at the time, I've known Reid for at his point at least 15 years, and probably more. I used to do alot of sailing in New York Harbor, and Reid was a part of that world. Being on wooden ships is a beautiful experience, and his Schooner the Anne is a beautiful ship. After his show in Chelsea, he went back to his home in North Carolina for a while, and then just the other day he sent me a text with a photograph and the simple message that he and his crew had anchored at the Statue of Liberty. He's back in New York for a show in Chelsea again, and the Anne is with him this time.

The project he's been working on is one that I'd heard a bit about when he was here in 2019. At that time he'd invited a small group of us to a show at the Planetarium that took us on a visual journey of the places where he'd traveled on his round the world trip that he'd been planning for when I'd first met him sometime around 2003. The project seeks to help outline a way that astronauts can learn through sailing how to prepare for a flight to Mars, and the artwork he has created along with his ocean voyage experience are part of that experience.

Reid's work is always so layered and full of textures. It's like nothing else that I've seen and it has a very unique voice of the Artist that comes through and connects the pieces though at times they are so completely different in their size and shape, the colors he is using and the layers of mixed media, including at times sail cloth, parts of his ships, ropes, writing, notes, photographs and other pieces of found objects that have deep meaning to him in the course of his life and the creation of his paintings. The expression "Every picture tells a story" could be enlarged for Reid to say that every picture tells many stories. As we look at the work we go on a journey ourselves, one that reflects from his reflections and brings us to a new place of being.

The Mars Analogs as his new project is called is one for the ages. The pieces he has created are at times layered with work from previous years and overpainting that brings to life his history as well as his life today. When we look into the world he has created, whether we are sitting aboard the Anne or standing in a gallery contemplating, we will find that we are transported, sometimes in a moment, to a place in another galaxy filled with the light of many stars.

Reid Stowe
On Board The Starship Schooner Anne
With His Crew
Anchored At The Statue Of Liberty
On Tuesday, June 22, 2021

And On Pier 81
In New York City

Hanging The Show
On 27th Street In Chelsea
New York City










With Soanya Ahmad





Blessings,

Jannie Susan

Sunday, June 20, 2021

An Abundant Life - Paris In New York

A few weeks ago a friend took me out to dinner for a birthday celebration long after my actual birthday. She had tried to take me out closer to my birthday, but a Chef friend at the restaurant where we were had beat her to it and when we finished dinner, one of the staff told us the meal was taken care of. I had been going into the City for the first time in ages for an actual Art opening, and my friend met me there, sending me a text on the way to ask if I was hungry. My response was that I could be, because I know that she always knows wonderful places, and when she arrived she said she wanted to take me out for my birthday and asked if I had any place I'd like to go. I couldn't think of anything and said she could choose, and her choice was Benoit which was just around the corner a few blocks away from where we were.

That night was such a magical one, and it wasn't just because I hadn't been out to dinner in Manhattan in so long. Benoit is a treasure box full of fine jewels, with everything from the moment you walk in the door feeling like you are being taken care of in the best way possible. The New York version of the original in Paris, Benoit was started by Chef Alain Ducasse and it was awareded a Michelin Star that is well deserved. We had so many delicious things that night, and when I ordered dessert, not only did they bring us the whole tart tatin and let me bring the rest home, but the chocolate souffle came with the words Happy Birthday written in chocolate along with a brightly lit candle. I exclaimed over the evening so much that when another friend was coming in town for a visit we decided to go there, and our night that evening was just as lovely. Restaurants like this are what make New York City so special, these gems of places where not only is the food superb, but every touch makes you feel the comfortable elegance of visiting with a good friend with the very best of taste and charm.

Benoit is a place to visit often, whenever you want to enjoy a lovely afternoon or evening. It's a taste of Paris and a slice of life in a City that only has wonderful memories to add to our future bliss.

Benoit
60 West 55th Street
New York City
































Blessings,

Jannie Susan

 

Sunday, June 13, 2021

An Abundant Life - View Of An Inner Life

The first time I met Fabricio Suarez, he was giving an Artist talk as part of a group show at Novado Gallery in Jersey City. I had seen his work earlier that evening, and when he began to speak at first I was surprised that he was the Artist who had created the paintings, because though he was very serious about the work, he seemed to be a much younger man than the one I would have expected had painted the images because there was such a darkness in them, an apocalyptic vision and also decay mixed with a feeling of being almost forlorn or lost or somehow wartorn and filled with strife. When I saw him again at the 14C Artfair and told him how much I liked his work and how beautiful it was, he seemed genuinely surprised as if he didn't fully know how talented and gifted a painter he is. I told him that I'd like to visit his studio and see more of his work and talk for a blog post, and then I ran into him at Prime Gallery when he had a few pieces in a show there and we did have a chance to talk a bit more. He told me he was moving his studio but that when he was more settled we could set a time for a visit, but with schedules and a weather and life, though we'd occasionally follow up with each other we hadn't had a chance to meet again until one day last year when I was walking down Mountain Road in Jersey City Heights, a favorite place of mine, I saw him with his easel, setting up for painting Plein Air. I asked him if I could photograph him that day, it was such a lovely and inspiring sight for even a regular day and especially during the times we were living in when people were not going out of doors much and though Artists I know were creating, there was a feeling of heaviness over so many people's lives. But there was Fabricio, finding a place to paint on the hillside, and I began to see him there fairly regularly as I took long walks at different times of the day, both of us trying to catch the beautiful light that shines over the buildings of Hoboken and further beyond to Manhattan in the distance, making buildings at times golden and at times rosy as the clouds and sun change hue.

On one of my walks, I asked him if I could see what he was painting. I don't like to bother people when they're working, whether writing, thinking, painting, cooking or building, but I had seen a post of his on Instagram of a new piece and I was pretty sure that it was the one that was currently being worked on in his outdoor studio. When he showed it to me I told him he didn't need to stop working and I walked around to take more photographs. It was the one I'd seen and it was stunning, a view of the hillside overlooking Hoboken and the Manhattan skyline with the sky showing a range of colors that I  knew so well from so many walks in that favorite spot and the many times I'd tried to capture it in photographs. The piece is on my wall now, and I treasure it. When I picked it up from Fabricio he had added in the full moon that had been rising in the early evening sky on one of the last days he had gone out to finish the painting, and the addition was a very special and meaningful one for me. I try to photograph the full moon each month, and often I find myself on that hillside in just that place looking for it.

Originally from Uruguay, Fabricio attended the School of Visual Arts and received his BFA in Fine Arts and Illustration there. He describes his current studio practice as Abstract Baroque, with surrealist paintings that bring that darker and more moody tone to compositions that consist of traditional European portraits and landscapes that have distorted imagery combined with spiritual elements of American savagery, in his words, "Where abstract brushstrokes acting as 'characters' form a narrative in the landscape. A basic exploration of relationships between impulsive mark making." He has been part of numerous group shows in New Jersey, New York and Los Angeles, and has done residencies at Mana Contemporary in Jersey City and Artists Off-The-Grid in Red Feather Lakes, Colorado. He has also traveled extensively and painted a great variety of landscapes throughout the United States, Europe and South America, and is also an illustrator, sculptor and avid plein air painter, focusing on the Urban landscape.

It seemed to me as I first saw the piece that he was painting on Mountain Road that there was something so much more peaceful about it than the other work that I had seen before. The pink of the sky, the reflections of colors on and shining within the windows of the buildings, the pale full moon rising just above at the painting's edge. It's a piece that I am so much enjoying the experience of, and although there may be layers of deeper meaning in his other work, this one brings me into the place that I know so well in a new way. As I view Fabricio's work, I am constantly finding new things to feel and see and explore. It's as if his own inner life is reflecting back out from his paintings and the life within the landscapes and portraits he paints reflect and converse with the Artist as new meaning comes to life.

 


Fabricio Suarez
On Mountain Road
Jersey City Heights, New Jersey












Blessings,

Jannie Susan